View Architecture Planning

Transcription

1 VMware Horizon 6.0 This document supports the version of each product listed and supports all subsequent versions until the document is replaced by a new edition. To check for more recent editions of this document, see EN

2 You can find the most up-to-date technical documentation on the VMware Web site at: The VMware Web site also provides the latest product updates. If you have comments about this documentation, submit your feedback to: Copyright VMware, Inc. All rights reserved. Copyright and trademark information. VMware, Inc Hillview Ave. Palo Alto, CA VMware, Inc.

5 View Architecture Planning provides an introduction to VMware Horizon with View, including a description of its major features and deployment options and an overview of how the components are typically set up in a production environment. This guide answers the following questions: Does View solve the problems you need it to solve? Would it be feasible and cost-effective to implement a View solution in your enterprise? Not all features and capabilities of VMware Horizon with View are available in all editions. For a comparison of feature sets in each edition, see FAQ.pdf. To help you protect your installation, this guide also provides a discussion of security features. Intended Audience This information is intended for IT decision makers, architects, administrators, and others who need to familiarize themselves with the components and capabilities of View. With this information, architects and planners can determine whether View satisfies the requirements of their enterprise for efficiently and securely delivering Windows desktops and applications to their end users. The example architecture helps planners understand the hardware requirements and setup effort required for a large-scale deployment. VMware, Inc. 5

6 6 VMware, Inc.

7 Introduction to View 1 With View, IT departments can run remote desktops and applications in the datacenter and deliver these desktops and applications to employees as a managed service. End users gain a familiar, personalized environment that they can access from any number of devices anywhere throughout the enterprise or from home. Administrators gain centralized control, efficiency, and security by having desktop data in the datacenter. This chapter includes the following topics: Advantages of Using View, on page 7 View Features, on page 9 How the Components Fit Together, on page 11 Integrating and Customizing View, on page 14 Advantages of Using View When you manage enterprise desktops with View, the benefits include increased reliability, security, hardware independence, and convenience. Reliability and Security Desktops and applications can be centralized by integrating with VMware vsphere and virtualizing server, storage, and networking resources. Placing desktop operating systems and applications on a server in the datacenter provides the following advantages: Access to data can easily be restricted. Sensitive data can be prevented from being copied onto a remote employee's home computer. RADIUS support provides flexibility when choosing among two-factor authentication vendors. Supported vendors include RSA SecureID, VASCO DIGIPASS, SMS Passcode, and SafeNet, among others. Integration with Workspace means that end users have on-demand access to remote desktops through the same Web-based application catalog they use to access SaaS, Web, and Windows applications. Inside a remote desktop, users can also use Workspace Catalog to access applications. The ability to provision remote desktops with pre-created Active Directory accounts addresses the requirements of locked-down Active Directory environments that have read-only access policies. Data backups can be scheduled without considering when end users' systems might be turned off. VMware, Inc. 7

8 Remote desktops and applications that are hosted in a datacenter experience little or no downtime. Virtual machines can reside on high-availability clusters of VMware servers. Virtual desktops can also connect to back-end physical systems and Microsoft Remote Desktop Services (RDS) hosts. Convenience The unified management console is built for scalability so that even the largest View deployments can be efficiently managed from a single management interface. Wizards and dashboards enhance the workflow and facilitate drilling down to see details or change settings. Figure 1-1 provides an example of the browserbased user interface for View Administrator. Figure 1 1. Administrative Console Showing the Dashboard View Another feature that increases convenience is the VMware remote display protocol, PCoIP. The PCoIP (PCover-IP) display protocol delivers an end-user experience equal to the current experience of using a physical PC: On LANs, the display is faster and smoother than traditional remote displays. On WANs, the display protocol can compensate for an increase in latency or a reduction in bandwidth, ensuring that end users can remain productive regardless of network conditions. Manageability Provisioning desktops and applications for end users is a quick process. No one is required to install applications one by one on each end user's physical PC. End users connect to a remote application or a remote desktop complete with applications. End users can access their same remote desktop or application from various devices at various locations. Using VMware vsphere to host virtual desktops and RDS host servers provides the following benefits: Administration tasks and management chores are reduced. Administrators can patch and upgrade applications and operating systems without touching a user's physical PC. 8 VMware, Inc.

9 Chapter 1 Introduction to View Integration with Workspace means that IT managers can use the Web-based Workspace administration interface to monitor user and group entitlements to remote desktops. With View Persona Management, physical and virtual desktops can be centrally managed, including user profiles, application entitlement, policies, performance, and other settings. Deploy View Persona Management to physical desktop users prior to converting to virtual desktops. Storage management is simplified. Using VMware vsphere, you can virtualize volumes and file systems to avoid managing separate storage devices. With vsphere 5.5 Update 1 or a later release, you can use Virtual SAN, which virtualizes the local physical solid-state disks and hard disk drives available on ESXi hosts into a single datastore shared by all hosts in a cluster. You specify only one datastore when creating a desktop pool, and the various components, such as virtual machine files, replicas, user data, and operating system files, are placed on either SSD disks or hard drive disks, as appropriate. You manage virtual machine storage requirements, such as capacity, performance, and availability, in the form of default storage policy profiles, which get created automatically when you create a desktop pool. With the View storage accelerator, the IOPS storage load is dramatically reduced, supporting end-user logins at larger scales without requiring any special storage array technology. If remote desktops use the space-efficient disk format available with vsphere 5.1 and later, stale or deleted data within a guest operating system is automatically reclaimed with a wipe and shrink process. Hardware Independence Remote desktops and applications are hardware-independent. For example, because a remote desktop runs on a server in the datacenter and is only accessed from a client device, a remote desktop can use an operating system that might not be compatible with the hardware of the client device. For example, although Windows 8 can run only on Windows 8-enabled devices, you can install Windows 8 in a virtual machine and use that virtual machine on a PC that is not Windows 8-enabled. Remote desktops run on PCs, Macs, thin clients, PCs that have been repurposed as thin clients, tablets, and phones. Remote applications run on a subset of these devices. New device support is added quarterly. If you use the HTML Access feature, end users can open a remote desktop inside a browser, without having to install any client application on the client system or device. View Features Features included in View support usability, security, centralized control, and scalability. The following features provide a familiar experience for the end user: On Microsoft Windows client devices, print from a virtual desktop to any local or networked printer that is defined on the Windows client device. This virtual printer feature solves compatibility issues and does not require you to install additional print drivers in a virtual machine. On most client devices, use the location-based printing feature to map to printers that are physically near the client system. Location-based printing does require that you install print drivers in the virtual machine. Use multiple monitors. With PCoIP multiple-monitor support, you can adjust the display resolution and rotation separately for each monitor. Access USB devices and other peripherals that are connected to the local device that displays your virtual desktop. VMware, Inc. 9

10 You can specify which types of USB devices end users are allowed to connect to. For composite devices that contain multiple types of devices, such as a video input device and a storage device, you can split the device so that one device (for example, the video input device) is allowed but the other device (for example, the storage device) is not. Use View Persona Management to retain user settings and data between sessions even after the desktop has been refreshed or recomposed. View Persona Management has the ability to replicate user profiles to a remote profile store (CIFS share) at configurable intervals. You can also use a standalone version of View Persona Management on physical computers and virtual machines that are not managed by View. View offers the following security features, among others: Use two-factor authentication, such as RSA SecurID or RADIUS (Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service), or smart cards to log in. Use pre-created Active Directory accounts when provisioning remote desktops and applications in environments that have read-only access policies for Active Directory. Use SSL tunneling to ensure that all connections are completely encrypted. Use VMware High Availability to ensure automatic failover. Scalability features depend on the VMware virtualization platform to manage both desktops and servers: Integrate with VMware vsphere to achieve cost-effective densities, high levels of availability, and advanced resource allocation control for your remote desktops and applications. Use the View storage accelerator feature to support end-user logins at larger scales with the same storage resources. This storage accelerator uses features in the vsphere 5 platform to create a host memory cache of common block reads. Configure View Connection Server to broker connections between end users and the remote desktops and applications that they are authorized to access. Use View Composer to quickly create desktop images that share virtual disks with a master image. Using linked clones in this way conserves disk space and simplifies the management of patches and updates to the operating system. The following features provide centralized administration and management: Use Microsoft Active Directory to manage access to remote desktops and applications and to manage policies. Use View Persona Management to simplify and streamline migration from physical to virtual desktops. Use the Web-based administrative console to manage remote desktops and applications from any location. Use View Administrator to distribute and manage applications packaged with VMware ThinApp. Use a template, or master image, to quickly create and provision pools of desktops. Send updates and patches to virtual desktops without affecting user settings, data, or preferences. Integrate with Workspace so that end users can access remote desktops through the Workspace user portal on the Web, as well as use the Workspace user portal on the Web from inside a remote desktop. Integrate with Mirage to manage locally installed virtual machine desktops and to deploy and update applications on dedicated full-clone remote desktops without overwriting user-installed applications. 10 VMware, Inc.

12 Client Devices A major advantage of using View is that remote desktops and applications follow the end user regardless of device or location. Users can access their personalized virtual desktop or remote application from a company laptop, their home PC, a thin client device, a Mac, or a tablet or phone. End users open Horizon Client to display their remote desktops and applications. Thin client devices use View thin client software and can be configured so that the only application that users can launch directly on the device is View Thin Client. Repurposing a legacy PC into a thin client desktop can extend the life of the hardware by three to five years. For example, by using View on a thin desktop, you can use a newer operating system such as Windows 7 on older desktop hardware. If you use the HTML Access feature, end users can open a remote desktop inside a browser, without having to install any client application on the client system or device. View Connection Server This software service acts as a broker for client connections. View Connection Server authenticates users through Windows Active Directory and directs the request to the appropriate virtual machine, physical PC, or Microsoft RDS host. View Connection Server provides the following management capabilities: Authenticating users Entitling users to specific desktops and pools Assigning applications packaged with VMware ThinApp to specific desktops and pools Managing remote desktop and application sessions Establishing secure connections between users and remote desktops and applications Enabling single sign-on Setting and applying policies Inside the corporate firewall, you install and configure a group of two or more View Connection Server instances. Their configuration data is stored in an embedded LDAP directory and is replicated among members of the group. Outside the corporate firewall, in the DMZ, you can install and configure View Connection Server as a security server. Security servers in the DMZ communicate with View Connection Servers inside the corporate firewall. Security servers ensure that the only remote desktop and application traffic that can enter the corporate data center is traffic on behalf of a strongly authenticated user. Users can access only the resources that they are authorized to access. Security servers offer a subset of functionality and are not required to be in an Active Directory domain. You install View Connection Server in a Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2012, or Windows Server 2012 R2 server, preferably on a VMware virtual machine. IMPORTANT It is possible to create a View setup that does not use View Connection Server. If you install the View Agent Direct Connect Plugin in a remote virtual machine desktop, the client can connect directly to the virtual machine. All the remote desktop features, including PCoIP, HTML Access, RDP, USB redirection, and session management work in the same way, as if the user had connected through View Connection Server. For more information, see View Agent Direct-Connection Plugin Administration. 12 VMware, Inc.

13 Chapter 1 Introduction to View Horizon Client The client software for accessing remote desktops and applications can run on a tablet, a phone, a Windows, Linux, or Mac PC or laptop, a thin client, and more. After logging in, users select from a list of remote desktops and applications that they are authorized to use. Authorization can require Active Directory credentials, a UPN, a smart card PIN, or an RSA SecurID or other two-factor authentication token. An administrator can configure Horizon Client to allow end users to select a display protocol. Protocols include PCoIP and Microsoft RDP for remote desktops. The speed and display quality of PCoIP rival that of a physical PC. Features differ according to which Horizon Client you use. This guide focuses on Horizon Client for Windows. The following types of clients are not described in detail in this guide: Details about Horizon Client for tablets, Linux clients, and Mac clients. See the Horizon Client documentation at https://www.vmware.com/support/viewclients/doc/viewclients_pubs.html. Details about the HTML Access Web client, which allows you to open a remote desktop inside a browser. No Horizon Client application is installed on the client system or device. See the Horizon Client documentation at https://www.vmware.com/support/viewclients/doc/viewclients_pubs.html. Various third-party thin clients and zero clients, available only through certified partners. View Open Client, which supports the VMware partner certification program. View Open Client is not an official client application and is not supported as such. VMware Horizon User Web Portal From a Web browser on a client device, end users can connect to remote desktops and applications through the browser, automatically start Horizon Client if it is installed, or download the Horizon Client installer. When you open a browser and enter the URL of a View Connection Server instance, the Web page that appears contains links to the VMware Downloads site for downloading Horizon Client. The links on the Web page are configurable, however. For example, you can configure the links to point to an internal Web server, or you can limit which client versions are available on your own View Connection Server. If you use the HTML Access feature, the Web page also displays a link for accessing remote desktops inside a supported browser. With this feature, no Horizon Client application is installed on the client system or device. For more information, see the Horizon Client documentation at https://www.vmware.com/support/viewclients/doc/viewclients_pubs.html. View Agent You install the View Agent service on all virtual machines, physical systems, and Microsoft RDS hosts that you use as sources for remote desktops and applications. On virtual machines, this agent communicates with Horizon Client to provide features such as connection monitoring, virtual printing, View Persona Management, and access to locally connected USB devices. If the desktop source is a virtual machine, you first install the View Agent service on that virtual machine and then use the virtual machine as a template or as a parent of linked clones. When you create a pool from this virtual machine, the agent is automatically installed on every remote desktop. You can install the agent with an option for single sign-on. With single sign-on, users are prompted to log in only when they connect to View Connection Server and are not prompted a second time to connect to a remote desktop or application. VMware, Inc. 13

14 View Administrator This Web-based application allows administrators to configure View Connection Server, deploy and manage remote desktops and applications, control user authentication, and troubleshoot end user issues. When you install a View Connection Server instance, the View Administrator application is also installed. This application allows administrators to manage View Connection Server instances from anywhere without having to install an application on their local computer. View Composer You can install this software service on a vcenter Server instance that manages virtual machines or on a separate server. View Composer can then create a pool of linked clones from a specified parent virtual machine. This strategy reduces storage costs by up to 90 percent. Each linked clone acts like an independent desktop, with a unique host name and IP address, yet the linked clone requires significantly less storage because it shares a base image with the parent. Because linked-clone desktop pools share a base image, you can quickly deploy updates and patches by updating only the parent virtual machine. End users' settings, data, and applications are not affected. Although you can install View Composer on its own server host, a View Composer service can operate with only one vcenter Server instance. Similarly, a vcenter Server instance can be associated with only one View Composer service. vcenter Server This service acts as a central administrator for VMware ESXiservers that are connected on a network. vcenter Server, provides the central point for configuring, provisioning, and managing virtual machines in the datacenter. In addition to using these virtual machines as sources for virtual machine desktop pools, you can use virtual machines to host the server components of View including View Connection Server instances, Active Directory servers, Microsoft RDS hosts, and vcenter Server instances. You can install View Composer on the same server as vcenter Server or on a different server.vcenter Server then manages the assignment of the virtual machines to physical servers and storage and manages the assignment of CPU and memory resources to virtual machines. You can install vcenter Server either as a VMware virtual appliance or install vcenter Server in a Windows Server 2008 R2 server, a Windows Server 2012 server, or a Windows Server 2012 R2 server, preferably on a VMware virtual machine. Integrating and Customizing View To enhance the effectiveness of View in your organization, you can use several interfaces to integrate View with external applications or to create administration scripts that you can run from the command line or in batch mode. Integrating with Other VMware Horizon Components VMware Workspace You can integrate Workspace with View to provide the following benefits to IT managers and end users: End users have on-demand access to remote desktops and applications through the same user portal on the Web that they use to access SaaS, Web, and Windows applications, with the same single sign-on convenience. 14 VMware, Inc.

15 Chapter 1 Introduction to View End users can access the Workspace user portal on the Web from inside a remote desktop for applications they need. If you also use HTML Access, end users can open a remote desktop inside a browser, without having to install any client application on the client system or device. IT managers can use the Workspace Administrator Web interface to monitor user and group entitlements to remote desktops. VMware Mirage You can use Mirage to deploy and update applications on dedicated fullclone remote desktops without overwriting user-installed applications or data. Mirage provides a better offline virtual desktop solution than the Local Mode feature that was previously included with View. Mirage includes the following security and management features for offline desktops: Encrypts the locally installed virtual machine and prevents a user from modifying virtual machine settings that affect the integrity of the secure container. Provides policies, including expiration, available in VMware Fusion Professional and VMware Player Plus, that are comparable to the polices provided with the previous Local Mode feature. Fusion Pro and Player Plus are included with Mirage. Eliminates the need for users to check in or check out their desktops to receive updates. Enables administrators to utilize the Mirage layering capability, backup features, and file portal. Horizon vcenter Orchestrator plug-in The Horizon vcenter Orchestrator plug-in allows interaction between vcenter Orchestrator and VMware Horizon (with View). You can use this plug-in to expand the settings and methods for provisioning remote desktops and applications. The plug-in contains a set of standard workflows that enable automation, self-service by request and approval, and scalable delegated administration across multi-tenant or highly distributed environments. You can also use these pre-defined workflows to create custom workflows. Integrating with Popular Video Conferencing Software Flash URL Redirection Streaming Flash content directly from Adobe Media Server to client endpoints lowers the load on the datacenter ESXi host, removes the extra routing through the datacenter, and reduces the bandwidth required to simultaneously stream live video events to multiple client endpoints. VMware, Inc. 15

16 The Flash URL redirection feature uses a JavaScript that is embedded inside a Web page by the Web page administrator. Whenever a virtual desktop user clicks on the designated URL link from within a Web page, the JavaScript intercepts and redirects the ShockWave File (SWF) from the virtual desktop session to the client endpoint. The endpoint then opens a local VMware Flash Projector outside of the virtual desktop session and plays the media stream locally. NOTE With Flash URL Redirection, the multicast or unicast stream is redirected to client devices that might be outside your organization's firewall. Your clients must have access to the Adobe Web server that hosts the ShockWave Flash (SWF) file that initiates the multicast or unicast streaming. If needed, configure your firewall to open the appropriate ports to allow client devices to access this server. This feature is available only on some types of clients. To find out whether this feature is supported on a particular type of client, see the feature support matrix included in the "Using VMware Horizon Client" document for the specific type of desktop or mobile client device. Go to https://www.vmware.com/support/viewclients/doc/viewclients_pubs.html. Microsoft Lync You can use a Microsoft Lync 2013 client on remote desktops to participate in Unified Communications (UC) VoIP (voice over IP) and video chat calls with Lync certified USB audio and video devices. A dedicated IP phone is no longer required. This architecture requires the installation of a Microsoft Lync 2013 client on the remote desktop and a Microsoft Lync VDI plug-in on the Windows 7 or 8 client endpoint. Customers can use the Microsoft Lync 2013 client for presence, instant messaging, Web conferencing, and Microsoft Office functionality. Whenever a Lync VoIP or video chat call occurs, the Lync VDI plug-in offloads all the media processing from the datacenter server to the client endpoint, and encodes all media into Lync-optimized audio and video codecs. This optimized architecture is highly scalable, results in lower network bandwidth used, and provides point-to-point media delivery with support for high-quality real-time VoIP and video. For more information, see the End User Computing Blog entry at NOTE Recording audio is not yet supported. This integration is supported only with the PCoIP display protocol. Integrating View with Business Intelligence Software You can configure View Connection Server to record events to a Microsoft SQL Server or Oracle database. End-user actions such as logging in and starting a desktop session. Administrator actions such as adding entitlements and creating desktop pools. Alerts that report system failures and errors. Statistical sampling such as recording the maximum number of users over a 24-hour period. 16 VMware, Inc.

17 Chapter 1 Introduction to View You can use business intelligence reporting engines such as Crystal Reports, IBM Cognos, MicroStrategy 9, and Oracle Enterprise Performance Management System to access and analyze the event database. For more information, see the View Integration document. You can alternatively generate View events in Syslog format so that the event data can be accessible to analytics software. If you enable file-based logging of events, events are accumulated in a local log file. If you specify a file share, the log files are moved to that share. For more information, see the View Installation document. Using View PowerCLI to Create Administration Scripts Windows PowerShell is a command-line and scripting environment that is designed for Microsoft Windows. PowerShell uses the.net object model and provides administrators with management and automation capabilities. As with any other console environment, you work with PowerShell by running commands, which are called cmdlets in PowerShell. The View PowerCLI provides an easy-to-use PowerShell interface to View. You can use the View PowerCLI cmdlets to perform various administration tasks on View components. Create and update desktop pools. Configure multiple network labels to greatly expand the number of IP addresses assigned to virtual machines in a pool. Add datacenter resources to a full virtual machine or linked-clone pool. Perform rebalance, refresh, or recompose operations on linked-clone desktops. Sample the usage of specific desktops or desktop pools over time. Query the event database. Query the state of services. You can use the cmdlets in conjunction with the vsphere PowerCLI cmdlets, which provide an administrative interface to the VMware vsphere product. For more information, see the View Integration document. Modifying LDAP Configuration Data in View When you use View Administrator to modify the configuration of View, the appropriate LDAP data in the repository is updated. View Connection Server stores its configuration information in an LDAP compatible repository. For example, if you add a desktop pool, View Connection Server stores information about users, user groups, and entitlements in LDAP. You can use VMware and Microsoft command-line tools to export and import LDAP configuration data in LDAP Data Interchange Format (LDIF) files from and into View. These commands are for advanced administrators who want to use scripts to update configuration data without using View Administrator or View PowerCLI. You can use LDIF files to perform a number of tasks. Transfer configuration data between View Connection Server instances. Define a large number of View objects, such as desktop pools, and add these to your View Connection Server instances without using View Administrator or View PowerCLI. Back up a configuration so that you can restore the state of a View Connection Server instance. For more information, see the View Integration document. VMware, Inc. 17

18 Using SCOM to Monitor View Components You can use Microsoft System Center Operations Manager (SCOM) to monitor the state and performance of View components, including View Connection Server instances and security servers and the services running on these hosts. For more information, see the View Integration document. Using the vdmadmin Command You can use the vdmadmin command line interface to perform a variety of administration tasks on a View Connection Server instance. You can use vdmadmin to perform administration tasks that are not possible from within the View Administrator user interface or that need to run automatically from scripts. For more information, see the View Administration document. 18 VMware, Inc.

19 Planning a Rich User Experience 2 View provides the familiar, personalized desktop environment that end users expect. For example, on some client systems, end users can access USB and other devices connected to their local computer, send documents to any printer that their local computer can detect, authenticate with smart cards, and use multiple display monitors. View includes many features that you might want to make available to your end users. Before you decide which features to use, you must understand the limitations and restrictions of each feature. This chapter includes the following topics: Feature Support Matrix for View Agent, on page 19 Choosing a Display Protocol, on page 21 Using Hosted Applications, on page 23 Using View Persona Management to Retain User Data and Settings, on page 24 Using USB Devices with Remote Desktops, on page 26 Using the Real-Time Audio-Video Feature for Webcams and Microphones, on page 26 Using 3D Graphics Applications, on page 27 Streaming Multimedia to a Remote Desktop, on page 27 Printing from a Remote Desktop, on page 28 Using Single Sign-On for Logging In to a Remote Desktop, on page 28 Using Multiple Monitors, on page 28 Feature Support Matrix for View Agent When planning which display protocol and features to make available to your end users, use the following information to determine which agent (remote desktop and application) operating systems support the feature. The types and editions of the supported guest operating system depend on the Windows version. Table 2 1. Operating Systems for Linked-Clone and Full-Clone Remote Desktops Guest Operating System Version Edition Service Pack Windows bit and 32-bit Enterprise and Professional Windows 8 64-bit and 32-bit Enterprise and Professional None and Update None VMware, Inc. 19

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